Tiutl is here. . . and so is Robert ell Ie,. with a hilarious new book MY TEN YEARS in a QUANDARY AND HOW THEY GREW ROBERT BENCH lEY gives the real lowdown on: How to toke core of a goat, how to treat peop,le who soy "one moment please" on the telephone the problem of getting a haircut in a barber shop, etc., etc. Pictures by GLUY AS WILLIAMS $2.50 HARPERS .... . ",," .ir) ,. . . "':}'>', . . i "Christina Stead is a . simon pure 9 e n ius, , , says CLIFTON FADIMAN -'**':/' ' .:.... < .;.-: ....-.Ñ. .." 'ß ;] , .'-":'-"":",:",;, in his re'JIiew of her latest noyel. I I THE BEAUTIES AND FURIES by Christina Stead author of THE SALZBURG TALES "Her finest book to da te . . . it discloses such streaming imagination. such tireless wit, such intellectual vir- tuosity that I cannot see how anyone who reads it can deny Miss Stead's po- sition as the most extraordinary woman novelist produced by the English-speak- ing race since Virginia 'Voolf."- The New Yorker. $2.50 At All Booksellers D. Appleton-Century Co., 35 W. 32nd St., N. Y. **** FROM A RIS GARRET by RICHARD LE GALLIENNE HMakes the reader fairly live in the historic city of Paris as he unfolds the story covering every nook and cranny." -Boston Globe. ttIf you have ever visited Paris, if you ever hope to, this work of love is a book to buy and treasure deeply." - Cle1/eland New.... HA volume for everybody - a bon voyage gift that can be taken as an in- formal guide-book."-Chicago Herald- Examiner $2.50 IVES WASHBURN, INC. N,EW YORK can't see the woods for the family trees. Still, there are many lively scenes, often Hogarthian, often grim with un- derstanding of semi-submerged lives, and if you cling desperately to these and refuse to worry about how Sally is related to whom, you will find Mr. Metcalfe reasonably rewarding. -CLIFTON F ADIMAN . ßR.IEFL Y NOTED FICTION SALKA V ALKA, b) Halldor Laxness.. A novel of contemporary Iceland, with Communist organizers and every- thing. The labor portion is dull; nor is its dullness relieved by the in- credible loves of the heroine, which follow a pattern already estab- lished in proletarian fiction, a pattern which mixes love and dialectics in equal proportions. The earlier half of the book, dealing with Salka Valka's savage childhood, is better. Laxness writes with boat hooks rather than hands; he goes in for squalor and brutality, but he makes deep dents in his material. No reader wil] soon forget this cold, this ter- rible country. (429 pages, $2.50.) YlIxED COMPANY, by Eleanor Mer- cein. These twelve stories take place all over Europe and America, but their human locale is constant. The author has a weakness for aristocrats, particularly those who have seen bet- ter days and now bring a brave tear to the eye by something in their erect carriage or in their conduct of a cane. "- The complications in their lives, whether in Poland, in Hungary, in France, or in the United States, she works out with professional maga- zine skill and with a sharp eye to the immediate effect.. The effect is prob- ably not lasting. (296 pages, $2.5 0.) CAGE ME A PEACOCK, by Noel Lang- ley. Rather feeble erskinizing of the story of Lucrece and her much-pub- licized ravishment. Mr. Langley sees the latter as a put-up job that didn't come off . Very talky and slight- ly naughty, but not as naughty as Mr. Langley imagines. (255 pages, $2.5U.) GENERAL IT'S THE LAw, by Dick Hyman, fore- word by Arthur "Bugs" Baer. An unbelievable collection of half-witted laws now actually on the statute books of our states, cities, and towns. An Alabama husband may chastise his wife with "a stick no larger than 95 THE NEW YORK TIMES says "The Virginia Quarterly Review has won a high and honorable place among American periodicals. It is original, thoughtful, readable." * * * THE BALTIMORE EVENING SUN says "The Virginia Quarterly has con- sistently exhibited courage, honesty, and intelligence. It has commanded the respect of distinguished people not merely in the South, but wher- ever good writing is appreciated." * * * THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR says "American in character, national in scope, international in quality and content." The Virginia Quarterly aims to please an international subscriber- audience. It is an exceptional ad- vertising medium for quality pro- ducts, books or travel. THE.. VIRGINIA QyARTERLY REVIEW Pu bl1.shed at ONE WEST RANGE UNIVERSITY VIRGINIA 'A',::'New Maior Noyel ... sEI )t HA ( :n::,r;):: .. ' o. .". .... .". .:,.... *z . u EIG' II . . EF E U One of the most mov- ing and important novels of our day. Boo k.. of-th e - Month for May. Viking $2.50